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o¢ Lh : hye ' : ae A, ad 4 -* ‘ North Dakota's Oldest Newspaper THE BIS ARCK TRIBUNE , The Weather Partly cloudy and colder tonigh? and Sunday. ESTABLISHED 1878 ‘ BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1930 Notre Dame Defeats Army 7-6 + PRICE FIVE CENTS Two Are Found Guilty of New Rockford Murder »semvaa JURY DELIBERATES NEARLY 12 HOURS 10 REAGH VERDICT Refuses to Convict on Charge ae Filed but Brings in Mana slaughter Decision SENTENCES ARE IMPOSED Walsh Gets Eight Years and Ness Six as Result of Jury Recommendation New Rockford, N. D., Nov. 29.— ing. Completion of the brought to a close a trial of four (Continued on page fifteen) WARN CHILDREN 10 OBEY RULES WHILE COASTING City Officials Ask Parents’ Help! in Preventing Possible Tragedy -— Reckless coasting by the children ,, |Tallied, however, ai Santa [ Diesin St Paul | ARCHBISHOP DOWLING St. Paul, Nov. 29.—(?)—Archbishop Austin Dowling, 62 years old, head of the Roman Catholic diocese of St. Paul, died at 11:15 a. m., here today. suffered a several years, but his condition did not become serious until last Oct. 28 when he was suddenly stricken with @ heart attack from which his physi- cians said he not recover. He for the last two weeks his condition has been improv- ing. Til health compelled him to resign as chairman of the Sones of to the church in America. He was ‘one of the leaders in the fight against the law which pro- hibited. parochial schools in that state. supreme court sub- ruled the statute uncon- stitutional. Archbishop Dowling was appointed to the St. Paul diocese Jan. 31, 1919, here from Des Moines, Iowa, that diocese for seven years. He was, born April 6, 1868, in New York and ordained 24, 1891, after gradua- tion from the Catholic university in We Dr. J. M. Culligan of St. Paul, one of the attending physicians, issued the following bulletin following the prelate's death: “The archbishop died from hypo- static pneumonia as the result of complications from a failing heart and circulation.” sz CITY IMPROVEMENT BILL ABOVE MILLION ag aH. = BHite ne i 4 Zl Municipal Work Adds $147,639 to Building Investment of $879,875 .| guage to be “just so” in order tliat he Radiogram Will Ask s 2 og to Visit City H. P. Goddard Drafting Mestage Carefully; Wants to Make Good Impression WILL: ACT FOR CHILDREN Bismidirck Young Folks Make Overwhelming Demand for “Old Saint to Visit Here Wrinkles furrowed the brow of H. P. Goddard, secretary of the Associa- tion of Commerce today. He was drafting # radlogram to Santa Claus and he wanted his lan- might make the best possible im- Pression on Old Saint Nick at the North Pole. Santa Claus asked Mr. Goddard to find oft if the children of Bismarck and thé Missouri Slope country want him to @gama to Bismarck this year. Mr. Goddard asked The Tribune to help him in his canvass, ‘The ‘Tribune the children to woke leters to adr, Boddard. ‘That was how it started. ‘The result was all Mine Blast Entombs 16 Lutie, Okla., Nov. 29.—(?)—Sixteen men were entomed today by an ex- Plosion in the number 5 mine of the The. entombed men were about 1,500 feet below the un when the known. The mine employs about 60 men. To Examine Charred Remains of Farmer E | HH i i ee wi . C., Nov. 29.—(P)}— The District of Columbia court appeals mine | resulted in 11 deaths. BURLEIGH COUNTY MANLISTED AMONG WEATHER VICTIMS Wilhelm Frederickson, Baldwin, Succumbs to Effects of Exposure NEW COLD WAVE FORECAST Two Fliers and One Steamship Reported Missirig as Re- sult of Storm } i gf - Z were ate § i 8 g g z fiat ue i i i t ; g g i i the city. At 7 : i above zero here. ily 55. i in northern fart of Ohio Tuesday. With her propeller gone, the steam- er Ipshur was drifting off Cape Hat- teras, N. C., waiting for assistance port by the steamer George W. Barnes. Coast guard boats were sent to her assistance. ‘The British steamer Wearbridge re- ported she was unmanageable and drifting in a'gale of 150 miles off Cape May, N. J. The coast guard cutter Sebago put out from Norfolk to go to her aid. More than two score deaths were traced to the frigid weather which extended over the mid-west, sending the mercury in many places to below zero. At Duluth, Minn., 12 below was registered and sub-zero reading from one to eight degrees were recorded in other points in Minnesota, Wisconsin, Towa and Lllinois. In New England the cold and snow Ice covered highways, causing numerous auto- mobile accidents led to several of the fatalities. A drizzling rain that froze as it struck the ground covered parts of (Continued on page fifteen) One Car Crash Victim Able to Quit Hospital Rev. Herbert Brown, Steele, one of the victims of a car crash near Me- noken on Thanksgiving day, has left the hospital and gone to the home of his daughter, Mrs. W. A. Kuebker, in Mandan, it was said today. id Mrs. 5 has a broken left rm and leg and some fractured ribs, will be compelled to remain at the hospital for some time. Another member of the family who cannot leave now is Ruth, 12-year-old daugh- ter, who has an injured ankle and severe lacerations on the head. ‘(CHARGE OF MURDER Thought Lost at Sea | MRS. KEITH-MILLER Mrs. J. M. Keith-Miller, noted Aus- trailian aviatrix, is believed lost at sea on an_ attempted . flight from Havana, Cuba to Miami, Florida. WILL BE MADE SOON County Attorney Must Act, as Coroner’s Jury Failed to Recommend Warrant A charge of first degree murder will be lodged against John Holmes, Wing blackamith, whose ‘heavy skinning ‘ehife was declared by a dutyy-Friday, to-have ~ gash in the-abdomen which : killed George Piepkorn, deputy sheriff, also of Wing. County Attorney George 8. ister will not take action, however, until Holmes is in condition to attend a reliminary hearing. He still is in a local hospital, under guard of deputy sheriffs, recovering from the bullet wound in a leg and knee which Grant Hubbel inflicted after the stabbing and while a posse was ig to ar- rest the blacksmith, ice night, at Wing. It was expected that the coroner's jury would recommend a coroner's verdict, but it did not, merely find- ing that Holmes had inflicted the fatal wound intentionally. That makes it necessary for the county at- torney to swear out a murder charge, 8 no one else seems inclined to do so. Motorist Injured When Jackrabbit Hits Windshield | ———_________—-¢ Dickinson, N. D., Nov. 29.—A Jackrabbit jumping against the wind@hield of his car as he drove along the highway near his home in the Gladstone neighborhood they will be able to save it and its sight although by a close call. Kunz thought the rabbit just an ordinary one when it Jumped out of weeds beside the road and hopped down the road ahead of his car. The rabbit leaped high in the air and‘ crashed into:the wind- shield, splintering the glass and sending a plece into his, Kunz’s eye. So far as the injured man could tell, the jack rebounded from the windshield ‘Neighbor John’ Says Giving is Best Part of Life to Him; Recites Prayer Jacksonville, Fla., Nov. 29.—(P) —John D. Rockefeller—“Neighbor John” to his Florida friends— turned inquiringly upon an inter- viewer as he arrived here this morning, en route to his winter home at Ormond Beach. Hardly had greetings been ex- changed, when he said he had a message of thanksgiving for th world. Palteringly but clearly he read: “If I am weak’ and you are strong, i “Why then, why then, .“To you the braver deeds be- long, “And so, again. “If you have gifts and I have none, : “If I have shade and you have sun, “'Tis yours with freer hand to give, “Tis yours truer grace to live, Paris I, who, giftless, sunless, stand, “With barren life and hand.” He explained it was a part of the daily reading at his breakfast table each morning. “That is.” he said, “a beeutitul f il & i [FOOTBALL] 2nd 3rd «4th_~=—s Final NOTRE DAME oe 0. U Tt ARMY 000 6 6 DETROIT 0 0 6 6 12 GEORGETOWN 000 0 0 CARNEGIE TECH ae al Beene VILLANOVA 000 0 0 WASHINGTON STATE 7 0 0 6 13 NAVY 0 0 | GEORGE WASHINGTON 0 0 a TEMPLE 13 20 0-7 0 7 14 15 13 49 DRAKE "BOSTON COLLEGE HOLY CROSS 0 7188 PREMONITION OF DEATH PURSUED NOTED AVIATRIX Mrs. Keith-Miller Started Fatal Over-Water Hop Despite Haunting Fears HAD BEEN UNABLE TO EAT | Knew Ship Was Nof Airworthy but.Hoped It Would Bring Her Commercial Job (Copyright, 1930, all rights reserved By The Associated Press.) Havana, Nov. 29.—(7)—A premoni- tion of death which she thrust aside through fear of being thought a coward, haunted Mrs. J. M. Keith- Miller, plucky Australian aviatrix, whom air officials here believed today to have perished in an attempt to fly from Havana to Miami yesterday. Virtually all hope has been aban- doned for her safety. Searching per- ties in six airplanes from here and Miamt having flown for hours over the stretch of Gulf and Florida Keys without a trace of her or the plane in which she set out at 9:11 a. m. yes- terday. She was due in Miami before noon. Friends of Mrs. Keith-Miller made since her arrival last week from Pittsburgh accused themselves today for not having prevented her, forcibly if necessary, from making the flight against which were all the odds of a Poorly conditioned plane, extremely rough weather and the mental hazard arising from fright when she was fly- ing over water. ‘Something Tells Me’ “I don’t know why it is but some- tells me I’m going down,” she before she took off. “I've the feeling ever since I crossed way over from Florida and how or other I can’t shake it off.” She called her plane an “unair- worthy crate, one which anybody but myself would refuse to fly,” explain- ing it was a conditionally licensed ship which she had “rescued from a Junk pile” and reconditioned. “I am trying to put myself over as @ commercial pilot,” she said. “If I can make a flight like that in an old’ ship without any of the usual equip- ment, it ought to be an easy matter to get some*company interested in using me as a regular pilot.” Was Unable To Sleep Many of those who came in contact with Mrs. Keith-Miller during her week's residence here remarked at her preoccupation and at her com- ments of not having been able to eat or to sleep properly. She admitted to some that she was “worried about the water hop,” but she refused to con- sider the idea of not making the re- turn trip in her plane alone, and finally, after being held up by weath- (Continued on page fifteen) —————-_—* Prelate Succumbs 1 BISHOP SHELDON GRISWOLD Chicago, Nov. 29.—(?}—Death came to the Rt. Rev. Sheldon Munson Gris- wold, 69, bishop of the Chicago dio- cese of the Episcopal church, in an Evanston hospital last night after a long and courageous fight against a 1 illness. A general breakdown and heart disease which necessitated his re- moval to the hospital seven weeks ago were the cause of death, The Rey. George Craig Stewart, bishop coadjutor, automatically suc- ceeds to the bishopric, Death came quietly. For days the bishop has been in a state of coma, with life sustained during his last week by the injection of fluid nour- ishment. He did not regain con- sciousness before he died. Before he lost consciousness vis- itors at the hospital had often heard him reciting from the book of com- mon prayer. “Lighten our darkness, we beseech thee, O, Lord, and by thy great mercy defend us from all the perils and angers of this night.” CHARGE IS FILED AGAINST FARMER AT WATFORD CITY Bannon Accused of Taking Property Owned by Family Mysteriously Missing Watford City, N. D., Nov. 29.—(P) — Awarrant charging embezzlement was delivered today to Sheriff C. A. Jacobson for service on Charles Ban- non, tenant on the farm of the A. E. Haven family of six persons, who have been mysteriously missing since last February. The criminal charge against Ban- non was signed by C. E. Evanson, public administrator of McKenzie county, recently named guardian of the Haven estate. Evanson’s allega- tion is that Bannon has disposed of some property belonging to the Hav- ens. A new element of mystery entered the investigation into the disappear- ance of the family today when it was disclosed that James F. Bannon, father of Charles, has turned up missing in Portland, Oregon, under circumstances considered peculier. Says Father Went West Young Bannon, who says he took the Haven family to Williston last February 10 to enable them to go to the west coast, and who has shown a letter which he says he received from one of the Haven sons, post- marked Colton, Oregon, and dated February 17, has told officials here that his father had gone west to search for the missing family. Leroy Herrington, 14-year-old Wat- ford City boy, who left with the El- der Bannon about a month ago when he drove to Portland, came home this week with the story of Bannon turn- ing up missing in Portland. Authorities at Portland and other cities in Oregon have been asked by McKenzie county officials to make a search for the elder Bannon so that he can be questioned. Exhibited Letter ‘The letter, which Charles Bannon exhibited to authorities as having been received from Daniel Haven at Colton, said that the family was there and probably would remain for a con- siderable time. This letter was the last heard of the Havens and their relatives in Oregon and Washington have also reported to officials here that they have no knowledge of whereabouts of the family. ‘Young Bannon has been questioned at considerable length concerning his story of the letter and his relations to the Havens prior to their disap- pearance, but steadfastly maintains that statements regarding receipt of the letter and his taking the Havens to Williston are correct, GERMANS FILE PROTEST Geneva, Nov. 29.—(#)—Formal Ger- man protest against alleged mistreat- ment of German minorities by Poland in Upper Silesia, was presented to the secretary general of the League of Nations, Sir Eric Drummond, today by the German consul at Genevs. EKE OUT VICTORY IN ANNUAL BATTLE All Scoring Is Done in Fourth Period; Failure to Kick Goal Beats Cadets 100,000 WATCHING CONTEST, Rambler Coach Lets Shock Troops Play Entire First Quarter of Game Chicago, Ill, Nov, 29.—()—Cart- deo'’s placekick for # point after touchdown was the of victory which Notre Dame's football machine scored over a fighting Army eleven in Soldiers’ Field this afternoon. The score was 7 to 6. Both teams scored in the final quarter. Schwartz ran 64 yards for Notre Dame's counter shortly after the final period began. Army came back to score but failed apts 100, obo per saarwere ly , in the stands. pire cd Coach Rockne started a second string backfield for Notre Dame, but sent in his regulars, consisting of Carideo, Schwartz, Brill and Mullins, as the second period opened. ‘When the team left the field for their 15-minute rest between halves 125 men with wheel barrows swarmed over the frozen gridiron scattering sand to provide better footing for the players, esa First Period lame won the toss elected to kick off. Army ar defend the south goal. Mahoney kicked off to the Army's 25-yard line and recovered when Army let the ball roll. O'Connor was slammed for a six-yard loss. Lukats’ pass was bat- ted down and he was run back for an eight yard loss on the next play, with Humbert throwing him, Army took the ball on downs on its 40-yard line. Fields punted with Jaswhich returning thé ball to Notre Dames 30-yard line. In a kicking duel, Carver let Jaswhich’s punt bound over his head after touching the ball and O'Brien recovered for Notre Dame on Army's 17-yard line. O'Connor hit the line twice for 5 yards. Lukats tossed a short pass to Jaswhich, putting the ball on Army’s 10-yard line, Lukats’ next shot was batted down by Sebastian and Army took ball on downs on its 10-yard line. Fields kicked to Jaswhich who ran it back to Army’s 37-yard line. Hanley and Lukats grabbed 5 yards through the line. Then Lukats pass was bate ted down. Lukats kicked’ out of bounds on Army's 24-yard line. Herb got three yards at center and Fields was a yard short of first down, Herb made first down on Army’s Se yard line. Fields quickly kicked, the ball rolling dead on Notre Dame's six-yard line, Jaskwhich, from be- hind his goal line, punted out of bounds on Notre Dame’s 22-yard line. Fields made five at right tackle and Herb slashed off left guard for four more. Fields made first down on Notre Dame's 10-yard line. Hoff- (Continued cn page seven) VILLANOVA FIGS WESTCOAST CHANPS Cougars Take Early Lead, but Eastern Team Shows Plenty of Scrap Franklin, Field, Penn., Nov. 29.— (®)—Washington State’s Cougar was having a real battle with Villanova in Franklin Field here today. crease their score in the first half. Villanova was giving the big team from the west coast a real Washington State managed to score another touchdown early in the fourth quarter but failed to kick goal. First Period Washington State rushed over touchdown near the end of the period, Captain Schwartz Villanova’s left end to score the 11-yard line after Jones and El- lingsen had slashed through eastern line for @ series of gains as the climax of a 40-yard advance. Maskell booted the extra point. Washington State 7; Vil- Tanova 0. Tonkin took one of Terry's punts and returned it 20 yards to Villan- ova’s 40-yard line just before the end of the first period. ' The invaders exhibited a lot of power, speed and ington State was stopped again, fail- ing to put the ball over from Vil- lanova’s one-yard line, with, four chances to do it. The Cougars got the ball on Villanova’s 12-yard line a penalty, back to the fringe of the line plays by Schwartz were for losses aggregating eight and Washington State lost when Ellingsen’s pass to Jones, fc a touchdown, was nullified by pesser’s failure to heave from (Continued on page seven)